macrumors 6502a

The iPad came out during my third year of college, so I was only able to use it for about two and a half semesters before I graduated. It was great for reviewing my professors' PowerPoint slides while studying for tests. Substantially reduced my need to print things. None of my books had an ebook version, unfortunately, but there is another reason an iPad is a great tool to have.

I don't see it as practical for note taking, especially if you have to draw a lot of diagrams, or for writing long papers. But maybe there is better note taking software now than when I first got my iPad.

macrumors 68000

I use mine for everything at school other than typing papers and taking notes. I use my MBP for coding, paper writing, video editing etc. and prefer pencil and paper for notes. My mini is great for power points, calendar, and many other things and fits great in my backpack. The portability is great!

macrumors 6502a

I wrote this earlier today; I didnt feel like rewriting it, so I'm just pasting it.

I LOVE my iPad mini. I have all my college textbooks on it (purchased via Aamzon or scanned), take all my notes on it, and game and surf on it when I'm bored. Ok, so the screen isn't Retina, but it's still a great screen. I mirror what a bunch of people have already said: readability of textbooks is fine, I don't have to "constantly zoom in and out" like other "users" do. I posit that these "users" probably don't have minis, are hard of seeing (not being rude), or are whiners (being slightly rude). I user PDF Expert to keep all my books and school material (syllabi, ppts which I've converted to PDF, etc.) on my mini with PDF Expert's excellent Dropbox syncing (other PDF software also has Dropbox syncing). I use the new Jot Pro by Adonit (with sound dampening tip purchased from Amazon) to take ALL my class notes. I don't use paper at all anymore, and by following Lifehacker's posts on keeping your computer linked to Dropbox, whenever I'm on my Retina Macbook Pro, all my files are synced in the background.

BTW, I have the 16GB mini wifi, as I use my iPhone's wifi hotspot when I'm not at home or school, which both have wifi. Also, I can even fit the iPad mini in the front pocket of my jeans! I wear Express Kingston classic straight leg jeans- so they're not skinny jeans, nor are they baggy jeans.

Personally, I've used the iPad 4 and I just think it's WAY too bulky and heavy. The mini is the iPad Apple should've released from the beginning.

From someone who uses his mini for at least 5 hours a day- many times 7-10 hours a day, I am super happy I bought it! Hope this help dude. You can PM me if you have any other questions.

macrumors newbie

The iPad is great for school. Get a bluetooth keyboard and stylus and you're set to go. I have both a rMBP and iPad but usually keep the rMBP at home and use my iPad on the go.

There are soo many apps that can cater to your needs but I'll mention the ones I use most. Notability is a top notch notes app for that allows me type, draw, take photos and record all in one note during lectures. I use Dropbox and Google drive to save and sync all files between my rMBP and iPad. Most of my textbooks are ebooks and I save them to dropbox so I can open them up on my iPad to read. Lastly splashtop is another favorite, the ability to access my rMBP remotely is icing on the cake.

macrumors 6502

I use:
Goodnotes for notes
Goodreader for reading/storing/syncing notes, textbooks, other things
Scanner Pro for scanning
..and several other apps that are nowhere near as important as those three. They work together, so I can e.g. be handed a paper document, scan it in Scanner Pro, open in Goodnotes, take notes, export finished document to Goodreader, where it's synced to Dropbox in the next sync.

I'm studying to become a teacher, so I also use it as a teacher. Mostly the same apps, though some teacher-specific ones for attendance etc. I love Goodnotes' dual screen mode when connected to an external monitor. Actually used that today, for helping someone with math:

macrumors regular

I use my iPad mini for taking notes in class. It's pretty handy. I can also look at any further PowerPoint slides or reading documents on BlackBoard (the mobile app or through a web browser). PDFs work fine on it since they've updated.

I would recommend buying a Bluetooth keyboard for note-taking. I used to take notes on the touchscreen and it's not such a great idea when the professor talks a million miles an hour. I'm a keyboard kind of guy, so I bought one for my Mini and it helps tremendously. The app I use that was recommended to me for taking notes is called Notability. Gives option for bullet points, highlighting, and drawing. I love it.

macrumors member

Definitely recommend getting a bluetooth keyboard like someone else said. It comes in handy so much (I'm pre-law). If you're a freshman/sophomore I'd recommend it for sure because there's a lot more e-books now. Which are always cheaper. A junior/senior ehh. At that point it won't make too much of a difference I'm in my 4th year. Don't get me wrong it helps, but unless you're going to use it for other things post-graduation it's not better than whatever laptop you're using and possibly a waste of money.

Plus you can view PDFs, slideshows, make your notecards, take notes, save on paper (I'm an environmentalist.) And perhaps most importantly it's faster than writing. At first I thought I may have trouble writing everything that I might need down, but honestly it's been easier since I'm a way faster typer than I am writing. Another perk is when you're bored in one class that the professor is droning on about something irrelevant....you can do other homework. I'm a big fan of working on papers during one of my history classes just because history comes easy to me and I can read it and learn it better by reading it.

macrumors 65816

I'm a researcher too. Can you tell me a but about the apps you use for reading and annotating PDFs and other academic papers?

Click to expand...

Hi there,

For annotating PDFs, my favourite app is iAnnotate, which I've written about here. Other good alternatives are GoodReader and PDF Expert.

For reference management, I use Sente, which I've written about here and here. Bookends and Papers are other good alternatives (there's stuff on BE in one of those posts, too). All these apps have some annotations features, Sente has a nice 'quote' function which is good for processing review notes.

For note taking, I usually export annotations from iAnnotate and send them to Circus Ponies Notebooks, which I've written about here, here and here, although I think I'm about to change to Evernote.

Guest

I bought an iPad, wanted to take handwritten notes, and do powerpoints and stuff, but I found for me, personally, I preferred going to class and taking handwritten notes because it was much easier.

My girlfriend on the other hand, who is med school, uses hers extensively. 12 hours per day kind of extensive. It seems to work really well for her, she listens to lectures, and takes notes and stuff on Powerpoint slides.

Only issue seems to be making sure you have the right apps, idk what she uses. Probably iAnnotate.

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